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How to Make Home-Canned Mixed Vegetables - Easily! With Step-by-step Directions, Photos, Ingredients, Recipe and Costs

Yield: 7 to 9 pint jars

Click
here for a PDF print version

Making and canning your own mixed vegetables is easy and you can use quite a
variety of vegetables (with a few exceptions noted in the ingredients section).
Typical combinations include carrots, peas, green beans, corn, tomatoes, summer
squash, etc.

The only trick is, you really do need a pressure canner. Every university food
science department and the government will tell you that it just is not safe to
use the water bath bath method; it takes the higher temperatures of the pressure
canner to kill the botulism bacteria.

Ingredients

Yield: 7 quarts, but you can scale this recipe
up or down to suit your needs!

6 cups sliced carrots

6 cups cut, whole kernel sweet corn

6 cups cut green beans

6 cups shelled lima beans

4 cups whole or crushed tomatoes

4 cups diced zucchini

Optional mix - According to the USDA, you may change the suggested proportions or substitute
other favorite vegetables, such as peas, zucchini, etc;except for
the following: leafy greens
(such as spinach, collards, kale, etc.), dried beans, cream-style
corn, winter squash and/or sweet potatoes.

Equipment

1 Pressure Canner (a large pressure pot with a lifting rack to sanitize the jars after
filling (about $75 to $200 at mall kitchen stores and "big box" stores, but it is cheaper
online; see this page for
more information). For low acid foods (most vegetables, you can't use an
open water bath canner, it has to be a pressure canner to get the high
temperatures to kill the bacteria. If you plan on canning every year,
they're worth the investment.

Jar grabber (to pick up the hot jars)

Jar funnel ($2 at mall kitchen stores and local "big box" stores, but it's usually cheaper online from our affiliates)

At least 1 large pot

Large spoons and ladles, knife, cutting board, peeler, etc.

Ball jars (Publix, Kroger, other grocery stores and some "big box" stores carry them - about $8 per dozen quart
jars including the lids and rings)

Salt (optional - I don't use any)

Directions - Step by Step

Step
1 - Prepare the jars and pressure canner

Wash the jars and lids

This is a good time to get the jars ready! The dishwasher is fine for the jars; especially if it has a "sanitize" cycle. Otherwise put the jars in boiling water for 10 minutes. I just put the lids in a small pot of almost boiling water for 5 minutes, and use the magnetic "lid lifter
wand" (available from target, other big box stores, and often grocery stores; and available online - see this page) to pull them out.

Get the pressure canner heating up

Rinse out your pressure canner, put the rack plate in the bottom, and
fill it to a depth of 4 inches with hot tap water. (of course, follow
the instruction that came with the canner, if they are different). Put
it on the stove over low heat, with the lid OFF of it, just to get it
heating up for later on.

Step
2 - Wash the veggies

Just wash them under cold running water!

Step 3 - Prepare and dice or slice the veggies

Except for zucchini or other summer squash; wash and prepare the
vegetables as appropriate for each vegetable, see below:

"Prepare" means cut out any soft or bruised parts, stems, and inedible
portions!

Carrots,
peel and remove ends

Green beans, cut of ends and slice

Corn, shuck, de-silk and slice off the cob

And so on for the other veggies. Zucchini: Wash, trim,
and slice or cube zucchini.

Step 4 - Combine in a large pot and boil for 5 minutes

Combine all vegetables in a large pot or
kettle, and add enough water to cover pieces. Boil for 5 minutes. (This is a
blanching, not cooking step!)

Step 5 - Fill the jars

Fill the jars with the hot vegetables pieces, using a
slotted spoon. Add hot liquid from the pot, leaving 1-inch headspace.
Optional: Add 1 teaspoon salt per quart to the
jar, if desired. I don't add any salt, it is not needed to
preserve the food; and you can always add it when you open
the jars later!

Put the lids on each jar and seal them by putting a ring on and
screwing it down snugly (but not with all your might, just "snug").

Step
6 - Put the jars in the canner and the lid on the canner (but
still vented)

Using the jar tongs, put the jars on the rack in the canner. By
now the water level has probably boiled down to 3 inches. If it is
lower than that, add more hot tap water to the canner. When all the jars
that the canner will hold are in, put on the lid and twist it into
place, but leave the weight off (or valve open, if you have that type of
pressure canner).

Step 7 - Let the canner vent steam for 10 minutes

Put the heat on high and let the steam escape through
the vent for 10 minutes to purge the airspace inside the canner.

Step 8 - Put the weight on and let the pressure build

After 10 minutes of venting, put the weight on and close any openings
to allow the pressure to build to 11 pounds.

Step 9 - Process in the pressure canner for 75 to 90 minutes, see the tables
below

Note: the tables below will help you determine the right processing
time and pressure, if you have a different type of canner, or are above sea
level.

It is important to learn how to operate your pressure canner by reading
the owner's manual that came with your particular canner. If you cannot
find your owner's manual, you can obtain find one online: Here is where to
find some common manufacturer's manuals:

Recommended process time
for Mixed Vegetables in a dial-gauge pressure canner.

Canner Pressure (PSI) at Altitudes of

Style of Pack

Jar Size

Process Time

0 - 2,000 ft

2,001 - 4,000 ft

4,001 - 6,000 ft

6,001 - 8,000 ft

Hot

Pints

75 min

11 lb

12 lb

13 lb

14 lb

Quarts

90

11

12

13

14

Recommended process time
for Mixed Vegetable in a weighted-gauge pressure canner.

Canner Pressure (PSI) at Altitudes of

Style of Pack

Jar Size

Process Time

0 - 1,000 ft

Above 1,000 ft

Hot

Pints

75 min

10 lb

15 lb

Quarts

90

10

15

Step 10 - Turn off the heat and let it cool down

When the processing time from the chart above is up, turn off the heat, and allow the
pressure canner to cool and the pressure to drop to zero before opening
the canner. Let the jars cool without being jostled. After the
pressure drops to zero (usually, you can tell but the "click" sound of
the safety release vents opening, as well as but the gauge. Let
the pressure in the canner drop to zero by itself. This may take 45
minutes in a 16-quart canner filled with jars and almost an hour in a
22-quart canner. If the vent is opened before the pressure drops to zero
OR if the cooling is rushed by running cold water over the canner,
liquid will be lost from the jars. Too rapid cooling causes loss of
liquid in the jars!

Step 11 - Remove the jars

Lift the jars out of the water and let them cool on a wooden cutting
board or a towel, without touching or
bumping them in a draft-free place (usually takes overnight), here they
won't be bumped. You can then remove the rings if you like, but if you leave them on, at least loosen them quite a bit, so they don't rust in place due to trapped moisture. Once the jars are cool, you can check that they are sealed verifying that the lid has been sucked down. Just press in the center, gently, with your finger. If it pops up and down (often making a popping sound), it is not sealed. If you put the jar in the refrigerator right away, you can still use it. Some people replace the lid and reprocess the jar, then that's a bit iffy. If you heat the contents back up, re-jar them (with a new lid) and the full time in the canner, it's usually ok. You're done!

This document was extracted from the "Complete Guide to Home Canning,"
Agriculture Information Bulletin No. 539, USDA. Reviewed 1994.

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